Welcome to the Northland Power Conference Call to discuss the 2023 Second Quarter Results. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during that session, you will need to press star one, one on your phone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one, one again. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded Friday, August 11th, 2023, at 10:00 AM. Conducting this call for Northland Power are Mike Crawley, President and Chief Executive Officer, Pauline Alimchandani, Chief Financial Officer, Adam Beaumont, Vice President, and Dario Neimarlija , Vice President.
Before we begin, Northland's management has asked me to remind listeners that all figures presented are in Canadian dollars, and to caution that certain information presented and responses to questions may contain forward-looking statements that include assumptions and are subject to various risks. Actual results may differ materially from management's expected or forecasted results. Please read the forward-looking statements section in yesterday's news release, announcing Northland Power's results, and be guided by its content in making investment decisions or recommendations. The release is available at www.northlandpower.com. I will now turn the call over to Mike Crawley.
Thank you, Chris. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us today for our 2023 second quarter earnings call. To kick things off, I want to reiterate that the health and safety of our employees and stakeholders always comes first. The past few months, we have stepped up our executive safety walks on our construction and fabrication sites, along with Yoni Fushman, our Executive Vice President, Legal Affairs, and Michelle Chislett, who heads up our onshore renewables business unit. I did a safety walk at our Oneida Battery Storage construction site in Ontario last month. I was pleased to see a very clean and safe site. Their site construction manager was promoting a strong safety culture. As I alluded to last quarter, there's no denying that macro market conditions overall continue to remain challenging for the offshore wind sector this year.
Several large offshore wind projects globally that entered into revenue contracts prior to the impact of the supply chain constraints, CapEx inflation and higher interest rates are reassessing their viability. You've seen all the headlines in the last few months. The renewable sector has been impacted by high interest rates and inflation, and our share price has certainly been impacted because of the materiality of our two large offshore wind projects. I'm pleased, however, that we've been able to, with our partners, secure amendments in the indexation and denomination of the 1.1 GW Baltic Power Projects revenue contract, as previously disclosed. This restores our project economics generally to what they were when we decided to enter the project in the first place, despite the inflation and high interest rates that have been experienced since.
On the 1 GW Hai Long project, we recently secured further improvements in the CPPA. Indeed, a series of operations on the project over the last year or so have helped offset a good amount of the CapEx inflation that we've already disclosed. As you know, on the third offshore wind project that we were working on that's at an advanced stage, Nordsee Cluster, we were unable to see a path to improved economics after the impact of CapEx inflation was confirmed, and we moved quickly to exit that project, recovering all of our costs and securing a premium. The materiality of these two large offshore wind projects is also what will give us significant additional cash flow once the projects reach full COD in 2026 and 2027. Despite the challenging market conditions this year, offshore wind does remain core to Northland's growth.
We control over 6 GW of leases for development projects in the U.K. and Korea. You've all seen the targets for offshore wind in Europe and other parts of the world over the next decade. I will provide more details on offshore wind later in my remarks. Shifting attention to the quarter. Despite the aforementioned challenging conditions in the renewable sector, our team completed our corporate funding plan this year with proceeds secured from our inaugural CAD 500 million Green Subordinated Notes issuance. This issuance is the final element in our external equity funding plan for the 2023 construction project, Hai Long, Baltic Power, and the 250 MW Oneida Energy Storage Project.
Furthermore, we also made decisions that will contribute to de-risking our business for the next few years by exiting projects that no longer meet our investment criteria, including a Colombian solar project, Suba, at a small write-off, at the Nordsee Cluster, which I just mentioned, and also monetizing some of the value in our growth pipeline with a partial sell-down of our Scottish offshore wind project. Now, looking at the headline numbers in the quarter, we delivered adjusted EBITDA of CAD 232 million in the second quarter, along with adjusted free cash flow per share and free cash flow per share of CAD 0.25 and CAD 0.16, respectively.
Compared to the same period in 2022, our financial results were lower, primarily due to the non-recurrence of the unprecedented spike in European market prices realized in the second quarter of 2022 last year. Apart from that, a recent regulatory change in Spain and slightly lower production across offshore wind and onshore facilities also had some impact on our results this quarter. As noted in our press release yesterday, we are, though, reaffirming the lower end of our full year 2023 financial guidance, despite the impact of this regulatory change in Spain. For those following our Gemini project app, we all are, we're also pleased to see very strong production in July for a month that has historically had very low wind resource. In fact, I think it's our strongest July at any of our offshore wind facilities ever.
Pauline will provide a more detailed look into the financial numbers later in the call. Turning back to our offshore wind business unit, a key focus remains achieving financial close on Hai Long, where we are nearing the final stages of approvals and diligence for the project financing, having finalized the banking group. We are also focused on achieving financial close for Baltic Power, where the team is presently working through the confirmatory due diligence stage, having received credit approvals and with the banking group finalized on that project as well. Following our exit from the Nordsee Cluster project, referenced above, we have no additional committed offshore wind project capital commitments over the next couple of years other than Hai Long and Baltic Power.
Cognizant of the current macroeconomic conditions affecting offshore wind, we will remain prudent with our pace and selection of future development projects. As announced in last quarter's conference call, following a competitive process, we signed a definitive agreement in May with ESB, a leading energy company in Ireland, for a 24.5% interest in our 2.3 GW ScotWind offshore wind projects. ESB brings a lot to the table as partners with extensive experience in offshore wind, as well as onshore projects in Scotland and England. This is the first of our project sell downs to close as implementation of that strategy accelerates. This strategy overall will allow us to manage single project exposure, pull cash flow forward, recover DevEx, secure premiums, and reduce our reliance on equity raises to fund our own equity commitments on these projects.
There's now a team dedicated to such sell downs at Northland. In terms of construction updates, an early works program, and fabrication of key components continue to progress at Hai Long. We also continue to advance the project financing, moving towards financial close as we work on customary closing conditions. Furthermore, last quarter, we noted that Hai Long had successfully executed an amendment to the Corporate Power Purchase Agreement for Hai Long 2B and 3 to increase the tenor by two years, from 20 years to 22 years. Now, subsequent to the end of the second quarter in July, we secured further amendments to the CPPA that included extending its tenor by a further eight years from 22 years now to 30 years. Notably, this extension makes the Hai Long CPPA one of the longest CPPA in offshore wind globally.
This is a significant de-risking of the revenue stream on this asset and will allow for value-creating refinancings and debt reamortizations after commercial operations is achieved. The Hai Long 2A and 3 CPPA extensions now puts our weighted average PPA life for our net capacity, including operating, construction, and capitalized projects, to over 14 years. Baltic Power is progressing well with the supply chain contracts for the project all signed and financial close expected to be achieved this year. The project has progressed across many development work streams working alongside our partner. Our South Korean offshore wind projects, Dado and Bobae, have both received all of their electricity business license, which is the first key milestone for the 2 gigawatt portfolio. Moving to our onshore renewables business, the Oneida Energy Storage Project, which is among the largest in North America, achieved financial close in the quarter.
Construction activities at the project have begun with road construction and site preparation. The project is scheduled to commence operations in 2025. Commencing operations this quarter also was our 130 MW La Lucha solar project in Mexico, which achieved full commercial operations in June. The project has been generating revenues since being connected to the Mexican grid earlier this year. Our two onshore wind projects in New York are progressing well towards achieving commercial operations in 2023. Furthermore, as announced in the first quarter, we signed agreements to sell 100% of the High Bridge project, with closing conditions of the sale expected to be met by the end of third quarter. This project no longer met our investment criteria due to cost inflation. We also made progress on the permitting of our 1.6 GW Alberta solar project portfolio.
Now, in Colombia, our utility, EBSA, continues to generate predictable and stable cash flow. For the Suba projects, after an in-depth evaluation, Northland, with EDF Renewables, our equal partner in the solar projects, jointly elected not to proceed with the development of the projects. Continuing permit delays, as previously disclosed, resulted in returns that no longer met Northland's investment criteria. Further, we concluded that the returns from the other Colombian project did not meet Northland's investment criteria either in the current environment. We are committed to being disciplined stewards of investment capital. As a result of that and our deep development pipeline, we expect to come out of this year with three large and attractive projects under construction. With that, I will now turn the call over to Pauline for a more detailed review of our financial results.
Thank you, Mike, and good morning, everyone. Before I provide details on our quarterly results released last night, I wanted to summarize the milestones the team has delivered in the first half of the year to achieve and de-risk our funding plan objectives that we set out at our investor date in February, despite a more challenging economic backdrop overall. We advanced on the financings of our projects with the Oneida Energy Storage Project, achieving financial close in May. This entailed securing approximately CAD 700 million in debt facilities for a 20-year term. Upon achieving financial close in May, we provided final CapEx of the project, Northland's equity, non-recourse financing terms, and five year projections of both EBITDA and free cash flow, which we will also do for the two other projects expected to achieve financial close in 2023.
With respect to the two offshore wind projects, Baltic Power and Hai Long, both are advancing in their financing processes and expect to achieve financial close this year. We have progressed on both financings amidst a changing macro environment. Both projects have a large global syndicate, including global financial institutions, local lenders, export credit agencies, government infrastructure lenders, and multilateral agencies, demonstrating both the quality of the projects and the value of Northland as a sponsor. Many lenders are long-standing supporters of Northland and/or our partners in our respective projects. We have also secured new global lending relationships, which speaks to the quality of the projects, their long-term cash flows between 25 years-30 years, and our track record as a developer and operator of large, complex offshore wind projects.
Such relationships will provide us with a competitive edge that we will use to continue to advance our renewable growth over the long term. With substantial international experience and global support from a large group of financial institutions and ECAs, we are proud of how Northland is leading both project financings through necessary milestones on behalf of ourselves and our respective partners. With respect to interest rate and foreign exchange exposures, in line with both our risk management strategy and our expected project finance terms, we intend to commence the hedge execution program for interest rate exposures before financial close. In addition, any construction costs with foreign exchange risk, which is applicable only to Hai Long, will be hedged around financial close.
As Mike mentioned, we closed our external funding gap noted at Investor Day with the successful issuance of the CAD 500 million of Green Notes, which was an oversubscribed offering. Post hedges and tax deductions, the cost of this offering was approximately 6.2%, which we view as being a good result for the business and our balance sheet, as it was secured at at least 200 basis points lower relative to the rate reset preference shares that were redeemed in January of this year. We were able to benefit from a EUR FX hedge, given the large amount of operating cash flows that we generate in EUR. During the quarter, there was no activity in our ATM program. The ATM program has now expired in accordance with its terms, similar to the company's short-form-based shelf practice in July.
We have also made a positive start to executing our sell down strategy, as evidenced through our announced partnerships with Gentari on Hai Long and ESB on ScotWind. We executed on the ScotWind transaction in the second quarter of 2023. We have two more sell down transactions planned for 2023, one of which includes the previously announced transaction with Gentari following the achievement of Hai Long's financial close. We now have a dedicated team to analyze and execute on both sell downs and asset sales. The team is actively working on plans to generate liquidity and cash flow, crystallize value, and de-risk projects and balance sheet exposures through a combination of these types of transactions.
As Mike noted, sell downs will be one of the primary sources of value creation and funding over the next couple of years, and we continue to see strong and keen interest in Northland's development assets and our projects. Through targeted asset sales, we will ensure that Northland remains disciplined and focused only on the core markets in which we have or have plans to achieve scale. We regularly review our portfolio and pipeline as part of this, and we have already started to demonstrate this discipline through the exit from the Nordsee Cluster in Germany and Suba in Colombia, alongside our partner, EDFR. As we progress with our key milestones this year, we will be working on achieving the following objectives: Financial close on Hai Long, including related hedging activities. Financial close of Baltic Power, including related hedging activities.
Closing 1 further early-stage development sell down in 2023. Closing necessary bridge financing to secure financial close, which will be subsequently be repaid in full once the sell down to Gentari is complete, shortly following financial close. Finally, revisiting our Spain non-recourse financing terms for potential optimizations in light of recent merchant price volatility. For clarity, other than closing on the respective project financings and the sell down to Gentari, there are no further anticipated external funding requirements expected to be required to achieve financial close. At this time, based on current market conditions and the current stage of the financing processes, management believes the company will have access to the necessary capital required to achieve financial close of the two offshore wind projects. Now, I will turn to our second quarter operating and financial results.
We delivered performance that was slightly below expectations in the quarter, largely due to the unexpected regulatory change in Spain, recently enacted in June. While the financial impact of the regulatory changes pushed out the timing of revenue recognition from 2023 to 2025 and beyond, the changes do not impact the long-term returns and cash flows expected to be generated from our Spanish assets, given they operate under a fixed regulatory return structure.
With respect to the performance by business units, in the quarter, the offshore wind segment generated adjusted EBITDA of CAD 121 million, which was CAD 20 million lower than last year, primarily due to the non-reoccurrence of the unprecedented spike in market prices and slightly lower production across all our offshore wind facilities. Onshore renewables adjusted EBITDA of CAD 66 million was CAD 41 million lower compared to the same quarter of 2022, primarily due to lower merchant revenue from the Spanish portfolio. Adjusted EBITDA for our efficient natural gas facilities of CAD 49 million decreased by CAD 40 million, which was expected as we had the one-time fee income received last year. EBSA's adjusted EBITDA of CAD 30 million was in line with the same quarter of last year.
On a consolidated basis, we generated adjusted EBITDA of approximately CAD 232 million, representing a decrease of CAD 103 million compared to the same period last year. Year-over-year results were lower, primarily due to the non-reoccurrence of the unprecedented spike in European market prices, a reduction in contributions from the Spanish portfolio, and as a result of the one-time fee from Kirkland Lake received last year. With respect to our free cash flow and adjusted free cash flow, Northland generated approximately CAD 41 million and CAD 63 million in the quarter, respectively. This compares to CAD 145 million and CAD 162 million in the same period a year ago. The reason for the year-over-year declines were similar to those contributing to the declines in adjusted EBITDA.
These declines were partially offset by a decrease in current taxes as a result of lower offshore wind and Spain contributions, and gains from the sale of two offshore wind development assets in Europe and certain foreign exchange hedge settlements in 2023. On a per-share basis, we generated adjusted free cash flow of CAD 0.25 and free cash flow of CAD 0.16 in the quarter, compared to CAD 0.70 and CAD 0.63, respectively, for the same period in 2022. I will take a moment to further provide details on the regulatory changes that impacted our Spanish portfolio. For 2023, the regulated posted price, that was EUR 208/MWh, was amended to EUR 109/MWh, retroactive to January 1st, 2023.
The reduction in the regulated posted price has an impact on the band adjustment revenue that is recognized in 2023. While the band adjustment revenue is lower in 2023, it is only a matter of timing of revenue recognition under the regulated framework. Therefore, it is not expected to impact the overall return of the Spanish portfolio. We expect to achieve our designated regulatory return of between 7.1%-7.4% over the remaining regulated asset life of the portfolio. There is no change in view on the portfolio or its value contribution to Northland. We've expanded on our disclosures with respect to Spain in both our press release and MD&A to support the understanding of the revenue construct under the regulated framework.
The regulated changes impact is expected to reduce adjusted EBITDA in 2023 by approximately CAD 90 million and adjusted free cash flow and free cash flow by CAD 75 million, as detailed in our disclosures. Included in these numbers was the reversal of CAD 11 million of band adjustment revenue in the second quarter that pertained to what was recorded in revenue last quarter. With the impact of the new regulatory changes, as described above, the Spanish portfolio is expected to achieve adjusted EBITDA of approximately CAD 160 million in 2023, which is down from CAD 220 million in 2022, and our prior expectations for 2023 of CAD 250 million. Captured power prices that determine our merchant revenue for the first six months of this year were EUR 75 per megawatt- hour.
For the remainder of the year, we have assumed EUR 96 per MWh to derive an average full-year assumed price of EUR 85 per MWh. This compares to forward prices in Spain of EUR 107 per MWh for the second half of the year as of June 30th, 2023. Upon acquisition of the Spanish portfolio in 2021, when we originally press released the transaction, the five-year average annual EBITDA that was disclosed at the time was expected to be EUR 90 million or CAD 135 million. With the impact of the new regulatory changes and considering the actual amounts that we've received since 2021 on a comparable basis over the same time frame, the EBITDA is expected to be slightly higher at EUR 105 million or CAD 155 million.
From acquisition date to 2030, we expect average annual adjusted EBITDA to be approximately EUR 95 million or CAD 140 million, which is unchanged from our prior expectations. Our expanded MD&A disclosures this quarter should help investors and analysts to assess the value of our assets without taking into consideration any perceived volatility coming from the regulatory framework changes. Our investment thesis on Spain remains intact despite all the noise from the changes that have occurred this year. Despite significantly lower Spain results, we are still reaffirming our full year 2023 financial guidance, but it is now expected to be at the lower end of the range. The noted impacts for Spain are expected to be partly offset by better-than-expected performance on other planned activities in 2023, including sell downs. I'll speak to this more a bit later.
With respect to our balance sheet, as of June 30th, Northland had access to over CAD 1 billion of available liquidity to help us fund our committed projects. We continue to prudently manage our balance sheet, taking proactive actions to further enhance our cash flow, bolster our corporate liquidity, and ensure that Northland remains in a solid position to fund financial close for the committed projects. Our core balance sheet management philosophy for new growth beyond Hai Long and Baltic Power remains unchanged, with a priority to maintain our investment-grade rating, secure non-recourse funding for projects, and fund our share of equity through sell downs and/or non-core asset sales strategies. Securing new asset-level partnerships in 2023 will give us an opportunity to broaden these relationships across other projects in the portfolio.
Lastly, turning to our 2023 reaffirmed financial guidance for adjusted EBITDA, we expect to generate the lower end of the range of $1.2 billion and $1.3 billion this year. For free cash flow per share, we expect the range to be between $1.30-$1.50 per share, while for adjusted free cash flow, we expect the range to be $1.70-$1.90 per share, also at the lower end of the ranges. As noted in prior quarters, our previously disclosed 2023 guidance ranges for our non-IFRS measures, including adjusted EBITDA, adjusted free cash flow, and free cash flow, did not assume any sell down proceeds, and as such, net proceeds from sell downs increase our reported non-IFRS measures only when they occur. We regularly review our non-IFRS measures at least annually, to ensure they appropriately reflect the financial performance of our business.
Within the Q2 materials, we made some changes to our non-IFRS measure definitions to accommodate for the transactions which occurred during the period and the economic reality of our ongoing business performance. All of the definition updates are included in our MD&A, alongside a full reconciliation from the prior and updated definitions and supporting rationale. The most notable change is that we made an amendment to allow for the inclusion of gains from partial asset sell downs in adjusted EBITDA, as this approach better aligns with Northland's ongoing strategy to continue to execute on securing partnerships through sell downs, and it also better aligns with definitions as per the majority of our peers.
In conclusion, while there were a lot of puts and takes within our quarterly results due to the regulatory changes in Spain and the first gains being realized from our partial, partial asset sell down strategy, we have made substantial progress in de-risking our corporate funding needs and continuing to advance Hai Long and Baltic Power. We look forward to continuing to provide you with updates on the projects as we work towards solidifying financial close this year. I will now turn the call back over to Mike for his concluding remarks.
Thank you, Pauline. As Pauline mentioned, we had a good quarter with many accomplishments and some noted challenges. Looking ahead, we have some big milestones this year for further acceleration in our growth. Our teams continue to work to achieve these milestones, and we look forward to updating you on our achievements that will set us up for another strong year in 2024. As I have stated before, we have a large development pipeline, and one of the benefits of this is that we can be selective and disciplined in which projects we advance. This concludes our prepared remarks. We'd now be happy to take your questions. Chris, please open the line for any questions.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your phone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Stand by as we compile the Q&A roster. One moment, please, for our first question. Our first question will come from David Quezada of Raymond James. Your line is open.
Thanks. Morning, everyone. My first question here, just on financial close at Hai Long. Do you still expect that for three Q, or could you see that shift to four Q? Just any color you can provide on how the project financing has shaped up there compared to your expectations. Let's start with that.
We're very pleased. I mean, we've, we've announced that the lender group is finalized on the project, that we're in, kind of the final stages of, of, on the financing. Our, you know, guidance to the market remains the same, that, that we would be closing this in 2023.
Yeah. The, the reason for that really is because, you know, when you look at what's left to do between, you know, direct agreements with suppliers, legal opinions, final technical court reports, a lot of that is from third parties, which isn't fully within our control, but we are working to advance through the financing, as, as soon as we can and pushing all parties to do so.
Okay, great. Thank you for that. Maybe just one, switching gears a little bit, some of the changes they've made in Alberta, or I guess, a pause on approval there, does that, does that affect any of the projects, in your pipeline there?
We've reviewed the detail around the announcement on the pause. We've had some preliminary meetings with officials in Alberta, worked through our legal counsel to make sure we properly understand what's been announced to date. Based on all of that, our current view is that the vast majority of our projects are not affected by the pause. All I would say is that we're, you know, we're continuing to have further meetings, and we, you know, are looking for additional information to confirm that initial assessment. That is, that is our assessment, based on the advanced stage of the permitting of the majority of the solar projects that we have in that portfolio.
one project is a battery storage project, which is unaffected by the pause.
Great. Appreciate the color, I'll turn it over.
Thank you. And one moment, please, for our next question. Our next question will come from Rupert Merer of National Bank Financial. Your line is open.
Hi, good morning. on Hai Long, you've extended the PPA to 30 years. Are there any changes to the price that come along with that extension? And can you talk to us about what that can do for your project finance? Are you, are you still sticking with a 20-year target on the project finance, for example?
On the CPPA, as we've disclosed before, there, there's very strict confidentiality provisions around it. The one thing that we are able to disclose, as, as we did before, is, is tenor, but we are not able to disclose any other details in the CPPA, unfortunately.
The one thing I'll add to that is that the financing is fully negotiated, so making any amendments now would require opening up everything and basically going back, which we wouldn't do at this point. I think the main optimizations now that exist for us, given the long tenor is the refi post COD, and that would be something that we would fully intend to do on Hai Long.
Okay. Looking at your assumptions for the project, do you have a sense, or can you give some color on what this might do for your target returns on the project?
we're gonna at financial close, we will disclose, as we always do, average five year EBITDA and average five year free cash flow. That'll come out at financial close.
All right, great. With the supply chain, there have been some concerns about the availability of wind turbines recently. Is there any impact of those supply chain issues on Hai Long or on Baltic? Can you talk to us maybe about your contracts today? I know you've largely fixed them, but how are they, say, indexed to inflation?
The supply contracts for Baltic and Hai Long are signed, executed. The supply is committed. Any of the constraints on supply of offshore wind turbines does not affect those two projects. Sorry, Rupert, your second question?
Just how your, your contracts are indexed to inflation. Do you have any, any risk from rising costs of inflation? I know you have some offset-
Yeah.
-from, PPA indexation, too, any color you can give there?
Right. In order for the contracts to be bankable, they cannot have open exposure, so that would, would largely be dealt with in the signed contracts.
Okay, great. Just to be clear then, so your wind turbine manufacturers are not forecasting any delays on equipment deliveries for your projects?
No. No.
Very good.
Yeah.
Okay, I'll leave it there. Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from Sean Steuart of TD Securities. Your line is open.
Thanks. Good morning. Question on your decision not to proceed with the Suba projects, and I gather that was driven by permitting delays. The question I suppose is, does this have implications for your longer-term commitment to Colombia, whether it's via EBSA or future organic development growth? Any comments on that market in particular?
Yeah, I mean, no specific comments. I mean, our, our, our view is that there will be a considerable amount of renewables built out in Colombia. That was our why we, we started looking at the solar projects in that market. At the same time, we always re-reassess markets as we move along, particularly in terms of our ability to execute in those markets and the predictability of permitting regimes in, in those markets. Certainly, our experience on Suba will be an element into what is an ongoing reassessment of every market that we're in, but we haven't made any decision at this point.
Okay. Revisiting Hai Long and, and getting towards financial close, and, and a lot of reference to challenging credit market conditions, and I appreciate there's a lot of moving pieces, but a number of your competitors have arranged and finalized, the, the debt for their projects in Taiwan. Any specific comments on what, beyond just volatile markets, has, has delayed this process from, from your perspective?
What's delayed the financial close of Hai Long? Is that the question?
Yeah, I mean-
Yeah.
Well, more just that others have gotten this across the line, and, and you guys, I, I assume it's, we're getting close to imminent, but, anything specific to the project from your perspective that's delayed this more than others in the region?
No. I'll tell you what, what the... I mean, and we've, we've, I mean, Sean, we've, we've talked about this a bit on previous calls, right? The, it's a bit of the timing of when we launched the financing. We launched the financing last August, last July. As you know, it's, it was through kind of August and September when there was a spike in tensions between Taiwan and Chinese related to the Nancy Pelosi, the, the Speaker of the House of Representatives visit to Taiwan. That slowed down some of the initial activity on the financing, certainly as, as, you know, lenders kind of digested what, what the that activity and what some of the reaction to it meant. That, that was one of the reasons for the financing taking a bit longer.
The other reason is that the, there is a, a project in Taiwan, the Yunlin project, which has achieved, some, significant, challenges on construction. Most of the other projects have proceeded very well in, in Taiwan, right? There's been one project that's had some significant challenges, and some of those issues came to a head just around the end of 2022. We ended up spending the first quarter or so of 2023, explaining to our lender group how our project, and our site are significantly different, from that project, which we were, we were able to do successfully. Those two things took a lot more time.
What we also did was significantly increase the ECA coverage up to 90%, Export Credit Agency coverage up to 90%, to give lenders more comfort around the, the, the, the risk perceived or otherwise related to the, the spike in tensions across the Taiwan Strait. That took some additional time to secure that extra coverage. All of that is done. As Pauline mentioned, we're into kind of the final stages of the financing, and, and some of those mechanical elements are within our control. Some of them are not totally within our control.
Just to expand on the last point, I mean, the 90% ECA coverage is a very unique element of our financing. It means that the ECAs are basically guaranteeing the financing, but they lead the financing process. Of course, working with ECAs versus commercial lenders is a completely different process, right? I mean, the due diligence that's required in terms of working with ECAs. We believe we are structuring the best long-term financing for the project, because having the six ECA parties long term is the best outcome for Hai Long in terms of managing risk, geographic, you know, exposure, and all of those other things. You know, it's not about the sort of the rush. It's, it's working collaboratively with the ECAs to get to the right long, long-term right long-term outcome for Hai Long and our partners.
That's, that's useful detail. Thanks very much, guys.
Thank you. One moment, please, for our next question. The next question will come from Nelson Ng of RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Great, thanks, good morning, everyone. First question relates to Hai Long. I see in the balance sheet that your carrying value is about CAD 720 million. You've obviously put in a lot of capital into that project. Are you able to kind of roughly quantify how much more equity you need to put into Hai Long on financial close or up until financial close? Like, are you getting pretty close to your, I guess, 30% net contribution, like post-sell down?
What I'm, I'm gonna do is refer back to Investor Day, where we showed how much capital would be needed to go into Hai Long, Baltic and Oneida this year, which is the CAD 2.2 billion plan. That plan is unchanged. However, the way that the, the structure of Hai Long works is that we fund at 60%. At financial close, we fund at 60%, and then, the sell down occurs at financial close plus one. Within a short period of time after, Gentari will come in for their share of 30%. What you see right now in the financials is, is the funding at 60%. It, it's easier to refer back to the Investor Day plan, which is, which is unchanged.
Okay. Are you able to say, like, if you assume 30%, whether you would have, would have invested your full stake?
We haven't invested our, our full stake yet. I mean, the, the funding goes in, so we're equity first, and we're funding every single month. We will probably be fully invested in Hai Long from a cash perspective, at least by, by December of this year. The, the money goes in, you know, first, before you draw down on the project finance.
fully funded from a 60% perspective or from a 30% perspective?
Funded from a 60% perspective to financial close, and then effectively, you know, reimbursed for, for the 30% after financial close, because the sell down only triggers once we achieve financial close, not before.
Okay, got it. My next question just relates to the operating offshore wind facilities. I noticed that the O&M costs this year has increased by 27% or 28%. You guys have long-term O&M contracts, right? Is the additional work that's taking place this year outside of the scope, or are there inflation step-ups in those contracts, and should we expect to see costs come down in 2024 or stay the same? Can you just provide a bit more color on the O&M side?
There's nothing unusual on the O&M activities on our offshore wind projects this year. Now that the main bearing assembly replacement was completed last year on the Nordsee One project, otherwise it's typical maintenance activities that are scheduled on the project. Some of the contracts do have inflation indexation in them, so you see some impact of that. There's nothing, nothing unexpected beyond that.
Okay, the 2023 costs are kind of normal, whereas last year they were a bit, a bit low.
Yeah. We'll get back to you, and, and confirm whether there's any, you know, unique kind of major maintenance that was scheduled for this year that's non-recurring. We'll get back to you and confirm that offline.
Okay, thanks. Then just one quick one on La Lucha. You mentioned that it's reached, it's been commissioned, so congratulations. Can you just comment if the project is currently merchant or contracted? I think you.
... indicated that there's, I guess, CAD 6 million EBITDA contribution this year. does that imply whether it's like a 12-
It's merchant.
CAD 10 million? Okay.
It's merchant currently. Yeah.
Okay. Is it fair to just double the CAD 6 million to assume the run rate, assuming-
For now, I mean.
Okay.
For now, we're looking at all, best value creation options for La Lucha. For now, I think that's a good assumption.
Okay, thanks. I'll leave it there.
Thank you. One moment, please, for our next question. Our next question will come from Nicholas Boychuk of Cormark Securities. Your line is open.
Thanks. Good morning. Looking at the realized power prices on the offshore platform and some of the curtailment measures and how that's been playing out, if you comment on how that's compared to your initial underwritten expectations. Thinking of the other offshore projects that you're trying to enter, how much of that can you handicap beforehand or plan for that volatility?
The, the curtailment, last year in 2022, and any negative pricing on, on, on Nordsee One, which is kind of, in a way, equivalent of curtailment, was, was below normal, because of, you know, all the anomalous market conditions, last year in energy markets in Europe. I think what we're seeing this year is, is, is closer to, to what we would expect in terms of, curtailment and negative pricing on those assets, so it's, it's kind of a return back to normal conditions. For any, investment, we always do, a detailed study of the, the grid, to be able to forecast with, with an independent engineer, to be able to properly forecast, curtailment risk and the range of, risks on curtailment.
You map that back to the protections that you would have under your revenue contract, and this is a route-to-market PPA as well, under that PPA, and come up with a final assumption. Then, of course, all these projects are project finance, so the lender's technical advisor is very much involved in that assessment too. So there's a lot of diligence and That goes into that forecast.
Okay. It's fair to say that what you're seeing right now from a performance standpoint is in line with the underwritten return expectations you had?
Absolutely.
Okay.
Absolutely.
Okay. Then moving to the corporate G&A and administrative cost lines, it seems like there were some expenses this quarter for personnel and other supporting costs. Can you comment on, on where those dollars are spent, and if, any other additional headcount expansion is going to be needed moving forward for new growth platforms or, or anything like that?
No, I think there were some non-recurring items in the G&A this quarter. I think the full year, you know, G&A expectation is, in and around CAD 75 million, call it. We would expect that to taper down over the next couple of quarters. You know, as we look out to the next couple of years, I think if you look at Northland as an overall business, it has been in expansion mode, in the sense of, you know, we've been having teams on the ground to secure projects. I think we've secured a really strong pipeline, and as we move forward to execution, we'll be looking at the right corporate structure going forward for the pipeline that we have on our balance sheet.
Got it. Thanks. Then last one for me. Just there, there was an inclusion of CAD 23 million from the gain of a partial asset sell down recognized and adjusted EBITDA this quarter. Can you guys comment at all on how much the back half is going to include of a similar gain recognition and how much-?
Mm-hmm.
that's going to factor into them, are you guys meeting the, the, the lower end of your guidance for the full year?
I think hopefully we've given you enough information to make an assumption of what we expect to get back on the lower end. You know, we don't give any specific guidance around sell downs, but I think if you can infer that we lost CAD 90 million of EBITDA, which is a sizable amount, that. We have, you know, CAD 20-odd million generated to date, that there's, you know, at least that quantum, slightly lower than that for this year. To give you just a rough range.
Okay, understood. Thanks, Pauline. Thanks, Mike.
No problem.
Thank you. One moment, please, for our next question. Our next question will come from Mark Jarvi of CIBC. Your line is open.
Thanks. Hi, everyone. just in light of where the share price has gone and, you know, obviously it's not lost to me the higher cost of capital right now, does that change at all in terms of where you're, you're putting your prospective dollars, how hard you push on, I guess, the smaller onshore projects versus the big offshore projects? Ultimately, I guess, if you change hurdle rates when you're thinking about capital deployment today.
No, I mean, I think, I mean, I'll say a couple of words, then Pauline should jump in, too. The restructuring of the business to by business unit was in part designed to generate further growth in onshore renewables and balance out our portfolio, both in terms of capital costs, but also in terms of cash flow and, and when, when cash flow is delivered, and also just in terms of risk profile, so that we have a mix of projects and also diversity of asset classes. For example, right now, whereas you've seen significant cost inflation in offshore wind and some cost inflation in onshore wind, there actually has been in the last six months a downward trend in cost of solar in some, some...
In many, many areas, right? Many way. Having a diverse pipeline positions you to be able to continue to grow, even as market conditions change through cycles. I think what we would see over the next few years, what we're focused more on in terms of kind of new projects, would be more onshore projects as Hai Long and Baltic Power move through construction, and we'd be focused on developing an offshore wind pipeline that would be in a position to FID towards the back half of this decade and even into the first part of the next decade. That's kind of how we're managing our pipeline. In terms of cost to capital, we're still seeing a lot of interest at the asset level.
So, that's why we initiated, our partnering and sell down strategy last year. As you can see this year, it really is accelerating. So bringing in partners at the asset level, helps, reduce our reliance on equity issuances to, to fund our own capital commitments, but also allows us to, de-risk, some of those projects, pull forward some cash flow, as well.
Anything in terms of just upward bias on return expectations or anything changed in terms of what your rates are now?
I mean, in terms of, yeah, in terms of cost to capital, in terms of CapEx inflation, what we are seeing, I would say, is, is, is now some upward movement in revenue contracts for offshore wind projects, but also for onshore renewable power projects as well. You're starting to see a bit of a market correction there, which is good. I think that would imply both an offset to inflation, but also a recognition of a higher cost to capital for the investors in those projects.
Yeah, then I, I think what's important also, you know, beyond the returns is the risk, right? When you sign a PPA, you know, I think it used to be, you know, you sign a PPA, and, and you assumed some relative stability on the cost side, but ensuring that you've got, you know, the flexibility in the terms and conditions of any PPA so that the developer isn't left holding the bag on, on cost increases. I think that, that piece has to, to, to normalize through in terms of what's happening in some of the discussions with off-takers globally. I think that is a key element to ensure that what the returns that we develop are appropriately risk-adjusted going, going forward.
I mean, we've, we've, as, as Mike mentioned, we've worked very hard to, to secure offsets on, on Hai Long and, and Baltic Power, but that type of risk we would not see taking on going forward.
Got it. Just last question for me would just be, you know, if the share price stays here, do you considering other options to try to highlight value of your portfolio growth pipeline? Do you just sort of stay the course and play the long game here? You obviously have to talk to not needing equity to get through financial goals in the big projects. You just, you know, take a patient as you improve the market out here in terms of being able to surface value or anything else you contemplate?
I didn't hear the first part of you, the first part. It just broke up a bit. Can you just repeat it again, Mark, please?
Yeah. I was just saying, if the share price stays where it is here, it's depressed and, you know, some doubts here, do you consider anything else to try to highlight the value of the portfolio and development pipeline, or you just play the long game and, and just ultimately hope that, you know, you get rewarded as you de-risk the big projects going forward?
Well, I mean, I think what, what, what, what is, you know, what Northland's strength has been is, is being able to, number one, look out towards the horizon and, and get ahead of, our, get ahead of things in terms of building-- developing a, a strong pipeline, in terms of making sure that we have the, capital to fund our growth and getting ahead of, those requirements. That's what I think has stood us in good stead over what has been a really difficult year, the last year, for, renewable-- the renewable sector in general and, and offshore wind in particular. I mean, that would be our approach going forward, making sure that we maintain a robust pipeline, that will, lay the foundation for a strong business over the next decade.
At the same time, also being nimble and adjusting to any changes in market conditions, as we've demonstrated this year by exiting projects where that no longer met our investment criteria because market conditions had changed and impacted the returns on those projects. I think that's, that's really what our approach is. What we would be looking at doing, as we already, you know, talked to the market about, is really in the near term, significantly reducing our reliance, of course, on equity issuances until the share price recovers, and looking more at monetizing the value of our pipeline through sell downs to use that to help fund our equity commitments to those projects.
I think that also allows the market to, to see the value in our pipeline and gives, gives a marker for investors to see, see the value of the pipeline, not just down the road, but also in real time.
Okay, that makes sense. Thanks, Mike. Thanks, Pauline.
Thank you.
The one thing I would say, Mark, is what is clear, what is clear is that over the next decade, there's gonna need to be a lot of renewable energy capacity built in Europe, in Asia, in North America. Where there's value is gonna be in controlling projects, controlling sites, controlling offshore wind leases over that period of time. So that's fundamentally where the value is at in Northland, both in our pipeline, but also in our existing assets, and looking for ways to optimize those assets, to extend leases, to extend permits on those existing operating assets as well.
Okay. Thanks, Mike.
Thank you. One moment, please, for our next question. The next question will come from Andrew Kuske of Credit Suisse. Your line is open.
Thanks. Good morning. They threw in the middle initial just for extra measure. You know, you mentioned earlier on the challenges in the renewable space, which we've seen from just the share prices broadly in the market. If you could maybe give us some context and color from your own perspective and vantage point on transactional comps in the marketplace, you know, whether there's been notable differences by generation type, geography as it relates to discount rates, return expectations, multiples. I ask the question in part because from a public standpoint, we've seen a pretty wide dispersion of multiples in some transactions where we've seen, you know, high single digits, EV, but then we've seen sort of mid-20s.
Just from your your vantage point on what's relevant to you, what have you observed, and what kind of changes have you seen over the last, say, year or two?
Well, certainly at, at the asset level, I mean, we continue to see high valuations for offshore wind projects and assets. One key marker that we, we've, you know, we've seen a number of, you on the call would have seen was the sale of Parkwind to JERA a few months ago. That certainly is one marker and gives you a sense of kinda, you know, one valuation on, on offshore... contracted offshore wind assets. In terms of offshore wind leases, the clearing price in the recent German auction for, for leases gives you a sense of the value, that is still attributed towards those leases.
I mean, it's no secret that the issue for offshore wind this year is not about the long-term prospects for the sector or whether there's gonna be a lot of offshore wind built out over the next decade. I think to most everybody, that's clear, which is why these leases are clearing at really high prices, and which is why we've been very deliberate and focused on securing leases in markets where we could at lower valuations or lower prices, where we could find markets where, that, that rewarded development skills that we have, such as Scotland and Korea. So that's, that, that, I think, is a clear signal of how the market views the growth of offshore wind going forward and the value of those leases going forward.
The issue has been over the last year, is where projects have secured revenue contracts, sometimes in competitive, very competitive processes, before they've, they've locked down their capital costs and locked down their financing costs, right? What Northland has done, spent a lot of our energy and effort over the last year, is on finding revenue cures, to Baltic Power and Hai Long to offset those capital cost increases. Where we haven't seen a path to, to, a revenue cure, we've exited, like on Nordsee Cluster. We've shown discipline to exit where we don't think we can restore our economics, and where we believe we can and where we have, we've stayed with those projects.
Going forward, the, the leases that we have, both on operating assets and on development assets in offshore wind, we believe has a lot of value, and we believe that the transactions that you've seen in the market would, would support that. Similarly, on onshore renewables, in terms of the, the sale of portfolios, development portfolios over the last year, last two years, there still continues to be strong interest, which is why we see a lot of value in our portfolio in Alberta. You know, subject to the comments about making sure that those projects are, as we believe, not impacted by the pause in that province, and why we're focused on building out a storage portfolio.
We've got currently building the largest storage project outside of California, I think, in North America, with the Oneida Project. We've got a team that is focused on developing a further pipeline of storage projects in the markets where we're currently active as well.
I appreciate that color and context. Then maybe just building upon the duality you have or the dichotomy of a very good competitive positioning in the offshore, but it's a long-duration, high capital cost game. Then maybe onshore, where there's less competitive advantage, but you've also got much faster cash conversion time. How do you think about just the balance of the company on a go-forward basis between, you know, offshore and then onshore activities?
We would still see the majority of our capital being deployed in offshore wind going forward, and even probably the majority of our DevEx going to offshore wind going forward. We would see more DevEx than previously going into onshore renewables and more CapEx going into onshore renewables in the near term, particularly as we work through the construction program for Hai Long and Baltic Power. For onshore renewables, I mean, your description is accurate in my view. I mean, I think you've described it well. For us, the key with onshore renewables is to pick markets where we can get scale, where we have confidence in the growth for renewables, and where we can execute and where the permitting regime is predictable.
That, that came up in an earlier question. On onshore renewables, we're gonna be very focused on select markets, where we can get scale and where we have confidence that we can execute well. We believe not only is that it's gonna be a good place for our capital to invest in those projects, but we're gonna create good investment opportunities for partners, to come in on those projects going forward, too.
Okay, that's great. Appreciate the time.
Thank you. One moment please, for our next question. Our next question will come from Ben Pham of BMO. Your line is open.
Hi, morning. I want to start with funding, going back to that topic. You, the ATM expires, you mentioned no external equity. Can you confirm that you have no intention to renew the ATM this year?
We can confirm that, yes.
Okay. Secondly, your partner, Orlen, on Baltic Power, there's some press around CapEx numbers being disclosed, EUR 4.7 billion, EUR 4 billion ex-interest, I think, is what the adjustment is. Can you also comment, is that the newer CapEx for Baltic Power? Should we be comparing your guidance to the EUR 4.7 billion or the lower EUR 4 billion, apples to apples?
Our guidance is, is, and has always been according to our, our bank model or our lender model, so that covers all of the capital that we expect to spend on a project. Our guidance that we gave previously, that this would be, the cost would be slightly above that prior range of CAD 6 billion at the top end. That, that maintains our, our... That, that is our guidance. I mean, there will be some movement around for FX and final interest rates, and that's why we always say there's a bit of, bit of movement, bit of buffer, but, but our, our guidance is the same. It is gonna be slightly above CAD 6 billion.
Okay. It's really something like comparing 6.5 for Orlen to your six, top end, roughly?
We, we, we said slightly over 6. If you want to put a range about it, maybe 5%-10% over our CAD 6 billion. Again, it'll, it'll, it'll solidify. Again, the contracts are, are now signed, and there's a few open items with respect to hedging, which will be closed before financial close. It's, it's hard for us to pinpoint a number, but it's, it's unchanged from last quarter.
Our disclosure includes what our capital costs are, including, contingency that we expect-
Directly from the lender model.
-directly from the lender model that we would expect to use on the project. Orlen discloses, according to their own criteria, of what the scope should be.
Yeah. Okay. Yeah, that's helpful. Thank you.
Thank you. One moment, please, for our next question. Our next question will come from Naji Baydoun of iA Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Hi, good morning. Just on the Hai Long corporate PPA, pretty impressive extension there. Can you just talk about how this was secured, the process behind getting that extension? Maybe you can speak to sort of the corporate power market dynamics in Taiwan and other markets that you're focusing on.
On the last point, generally in Europe, in Taiwan, in starting in Korea now, too, and in North America, we're seeing broader interest in corporate offtake than a year ago. We're seeing, generally speaking, higher prices on corporate offtake on renewables than a year ago. I mean, I suppose none of that should be a surprise, just in terms of kind of corporations moving now more aggressively towards net zero targets and decarbonization programs. That is, in our view, one of the really positive trends of the last year.
On Hai Long and Baltic, as we talked earlier in the call, we've been really focused on the last year and a half, in looking for ways to offset any impact of higher interest rates and capital cost increases that have occurred in the sector over the last year. All I can say, broadly speaking, is there's been a lot of activity and a lot of focus, and we believe a lot of progress, and then, and success in, in that, that area on both projects.
for Hai Long, was this, Like, were you approached by the offtaker, or did you take the initial steps? Just how, how did those discussions unfold?
ict confidentiality provisions in that CPPA, so, yeah, I just leave it, leave it at my broader statement that we, we are, have been, working really hard on, optimizing those two projects, over the last year to, maintain or restore economics on them
And obviously, you, you talked a little bit about being more focused on certain markets, exiting Nordsee. We're seeing other players as well exiting, you know, markets or contracts. I'm just wondering if you can give us an update on, are there other markets that you would potentially be looking to exit? And I appreciate your comments on sort of your long-term commitment on, on Colombia, but, you know, Mexico potentially is not a core market. I'm just wondering if there are other areas that you're thinking of that would be considered non-core today?
No. Go ahead.
What I would say was our team is focused on this dedicated team is focused on sell downs and asset sales. You know, in markets where, you know, we either have scale or see an avenue to develop scale, those are, you know, defined as core markets. Anything that doesn't meet that criteria is defined as non-core and will be under review to see what generates the most value for Northland overall. There could be others.
Okay, thank you.
The point, Matthew, around the benefit of a big portfolio allowing us to be selective and disciplined, it's not just something in our opening remarks on these calls. It is real, right? We are able to now take a look through this development portfolio that we've built up and select the markets, the projects that are gonna return, offer the most attractive returns on a risk-adjusted basis, proceed with those, and be disciplined in exiting other opportunities or even other markets where the investment thesis has not held. I think that puts the company in a very strong position moving forward.
That's very clear. Appreciate the details.
Thank you. One moment. Mr. Crawley, there are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back over to you.
Okay. Well, thanks to everyone for joining us today. We're going to hold our next call following the release of our third quarter 2023 results in November. In the meantime, I want to thank you for your continued confidence and, and your support.
Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude the conference call for today. Thank you for participating. Have a pleasant day.